Re: boolean datatype ... wtf?

On Sep 30, 3:22 pm, Bob Badour <bbad..._at_pei.sympatico.ca> wrote:
> Paul Mansour wrote:> > On Sep 30, 11:17 am, Tegiri Nenashi <tegirinena..._at_gmail.com> wrote:>> >>On Sep 30, 3:32 am, Tony Andrews <tony.andrew..._at_gmail.com> wrote:>> >>> create table applications_with_immobolisers (application_id> >>>references applications primary key);> >>>... etc.>> >>>That may be the right approach in a theoretical true RDBMS, but I'm> >>>pretty sure it would get me sacked as a lunatic in any SQL-based DBMS> >>>team!>> >>Ah, this is why one don't usually find any unary relation in SQL Dbms!> >>This is very odd from theoretical perspective as one might expect> >>there are many more unary relations than binary ones, many more binary> >>than ternary and so on (akin to Zipfian distribution). Well SQL made> >>creating a table more expensive than adding an column, that is one of> >>its many implementational sins.>> > Isn't creating a new table conceptually more expensive than adding a> > column, regardless of the implementation? Perhaps this is why Date's> > well-known supplier and parts database has a S.STATUS column rather> > than a STATUS table, and P.COLOR column column rather than P.COLOR> > table, and all the attendent foreign keys.>> Concepts are free.>> If one uses 6NF for temporal data, little difference exists between> creating a new table or adding a column.- Hide quoted text ->> - Show quoted text -

Ignorance or irresponsibility?

Is Badour exhibiting his complete ignorance to the consequences of
decomposing a 5NF database scheme into one that is in 6NF? Unless the
5NF scheme was already in 6NF, the equivalent 6NF scheme will contain
numerous additional cyclical referential constraints that were not
present in the 5NF scheme. Assuming that the introduction of the
additional attribute doesn't violate 5NF, no additional constraints
are required that aren't implied by the candidate key constraint on
the 5NF relation scheme. Introducing a 6NF relation scheme to the
equivalent 6NF database scheme requires explicit declaration of a
cyclical referential constraint. If it isn't just plain ignorance,
then doesn't such careless disregard of those consequences border on
irresponsibility? People here have the impression that Badour knows
what he's talking about. Deliberately or carelessly misleading those
who look up to them is behaviour usually attributible to politicians
and lawyers, con-men and thieves--predatory personalities.
Received on Thu Sep 30 2010 - 19:24:17 CDT